Political theory after Deleuze

Bibliographic Information

Political theory after Deleuze

Nathan Widder

(Deleuze encounters)

Continuum, c2012

  • : PB

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [181]-187) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This is a clear and concise overview of and introduction to Deleuze in the field of politics. "Political Theory After Deleuze" provides an accessible introduction to Deleuze in the field of politics by putting his thought directly into dialogue with contemporary debates in political theory. The book focuses particularly on Deleuze's contribution to emerging debates in political theory. As these developments are a response to the inadequacies many theorists find with traditional dominant approaches, the book speaks to those traditional approaches as well. The book is not an exegesis of Deleuze's ideas on politics or political theory, but rather a re-reading of the field from a Deleuzian perspective. Nathan Widder shows how Deleuze offers a distinctive contribution to debates in political theory that are trying to rethink the nature of pluralism, individual and collective subjectivity, power relations and the state, the emergence of political events, and the role of desire in politics. Deleuze already figures in many of these debates and this book makes his contribution more accessible to a student audience and facilitates communication between the emerging field of Deleuze Studies and political theory as it is currently taught. "The Deleuze Encounters" series provides students in philosophy and related subjects with concise and accessible introductions to the application of Deleuze's work in key areas of study. Each book demonstrates how Deleuze's ideas and concepts can enhance present work in a particular field.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction: The Ontological Turn in Political Thought
  • 2. Identity and Difference
  • 3. Desire and Subjectivity
  • 4. Time and Novelty: The Nature of an Event
  • 5. The Many Levels of Politics: Deterritorialization, the War Machine, Micropolitics and the State
  • Further Reading
  • Index.

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